the teaching and

The Schole Master: or a plaine and per¬fect way of teaching children to understand, write, and speake the Latin tonge; but espe¬cially proposed for the private bringing up of youth, in jentlemen and noblemens houses; and commodious also for all such, as have forgot the Latin tonge, and would by themselves, without salvatore ferragamo salea scholemaster, in short time, and with small paines, recover a sufficient habilitie to under¬stand, write, and speake Latin. By Roger As- cham. Printed by John Day. 1571. (Quarto, in sixty-seven leaves, besides the dedication and preface, black letter.) This learned and elaborate work of that author, who was Latin secretary, and tutor for the Greek tongue, to Queen Elizabeth, was published about three yearsferragamo sale after his death, by his wife Margaret; who dedicates it to Sir William Cecil, Principal Secretary of State. It was first undertaken, upon the occasion of some dis¬course which happened at the said Sir William Cecills table, in his apartment at Windsor, when the court was retired thither, at the time of a great plague, in Lon¬don, in 1563. When Sir William, telling the company, he had heard, that divers scholars of Eaton had run away that morning from the school, for fear of beat- i it produced their different sentiments, whe- ther mildness or severity had the best effect in the scholastick education of youth?1ferragamo shoes Mr. Ascham inT clined, as Sir William had done, to the milder course; and used such arguments, that Sir Richard Sackville, Treasurer of the Exchequer, then present, afterwards prevailed upon him to draw his thoughts out, upon the teaching and training of youth, into a regular trea¬tise, for the use, among others, of bis grandson, mas¬ter Robert Sackville: and that was the occasion of writing this Work.